Dome-shaped inductive coupling wall having a plurality of radii for an inductively coupled plasma reactor

ABSTRACT

A non-conductive dome-shaped portion having a plurality of different radii as a dielectric inductive coupling wall of a reactor chamber. The non-conductive dome-shaped portion having a plurality of different radii being adapted to be positioned in close underlying relationship to a coil antenna and transmissive of RF energy inductively coupled into the chamber from the coil.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/111,625, by Nowak et al., filed Jul. 7, 1998, issued on Apr. 24, 2001, as U.S. Pat. No. 6,220,201, which is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/766,053, by Nowak et al., filed Dec. 16, 1996, issued on Feb. 2, 1999 as U.S. Pat. No. 5,865,896, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/234,746, by Nowak et al., filed Apr. 26, 1994, now abandoned, which is a continuation in part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/113,776, by Fairbairn et al., filed Aug. 27, 1993, issued on Mar. 25, 1997 as U.S. Pat. No. 5,614,055, all of which are herein incorporated by reference in their entireties.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Technical Field

The invention relates to reactors for performing radio frequency (RF) plasma chemical vapor deposition (CVD) and sputter etch processes and particularly to such reactors for performing both processes simultaneously.

2. Background Art

CVD formation of a thin silicon dioxide film on an integrated circuit structure having small (0.5 μm or less) features with high aspect ratios (i.e., a large value of the ratio of channel depth to channel width, e.g., greater than two) is nearly impossible to accomplish without formation of voids between the metal lines. As shown in FIG. 1A, in depositing a dielectric material 10 on a device having a very narrow channel 12 (i.e., an aspect ratio greater than 2) separating two metal lines 14 a, 14 b, relatively little of the dielectric material 10 reaches the bottom of the channel 12, leaving a void 15. This is because dielectric material 10 is deposited more quickly at the corners 16 of the metal lines 14 than elsewhere along the vertical walls of the metal lines 14, thus at least nearly sealing off the bottom of the channel 12 during the deposition process. A solution to this problem is to simultaneously etch the dielectric material 10 from the corners while depositing using an RF sputter etch process that uses ions impinging vertically on the surface, thus preventing pinching off of the channel 12. This process can be used for spaces with aspect ratios greater than two, unlike currently-used sequential deposition and sputtering which fails below 0.5 μm.

As illustrated in the graph of FIG. 1B, an RF sputter etch process has a maximum etch rate for surfaces disposed at a 45° angle relative to the incoming ions. By directing the ions to impinge in a perpendicular direction relative to the wafer surface, the sputter etch process quickly etches angled surfaces formed by the simultaneous deposition process (such as dielectric surfaces formed over the corners 16) and etches other surfaces (i.e., horizontal and vertical surfaces) much more slowly, thus preventing the blockage of the channel 12 and formation of the void 15 shown in FIG. 1A. This permits deposition of dielectric material preferentially at the bottom of the channel 12 and on top of the lines 14, relative to the side walls and corners 16, as illustrated in FIG. 1C.

In order to accomplish the foregoing, the RF plasma sputter etch rate near the corners 16 must be on the order of the deposition rate. High plasma density is required to meet the requirement of high sputtering rate (production throughput) without electrical damage to the semiconductor devices. In order to achieve such a sputter etch rate across an entire wafer (such as an eight inch Silicon wafer), the plasma ion density must be sufficiently high and uniform across the entire wafer. Such uniformity is readily accomplished using a plasma consisting almost entirely of argon ions. However, it will be remembered that the sputter etch process desired here is ancillary to a CVD process requiring species other than argon to be present. Specifically, in a CVD process employing silane (SiH₄) in which the dielectric material 10 is SiO₂, oxygen must be present in significant quantities, the oxygen being ionized in the plasma. The oxygen ions have a relatively short lifetime and are highly susceptible to quenching. It is very difficult to attain a dense and very uniform distribution of oxygen ions across the wafer surface, particularly 8-inch diameter wafers of the type now currently in use.

While the plasma may be generated with electron cyclotron resonance (ECR), ECR apparatus has limited commercial attractiveness due to design complexity, size and cost. Moreover, since the plasma is generated remotely from the wafer, scaling the ECR reactor up to accommodate an 8-inch wafer diameter is difficult and requires simultaneous use of complex magnetic fields.

Application of inductively coupled plasmas to high-rate sputter etching in CVD systems is disclosed in application Ser. No. 07/941,507 filed Sep. 8, 1992 by Collins et al. entitled “Plasma Reactor Using Electromagnetic RF Coupling and Processes” and assigned to the assignee of the present application, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety into the present specification. An earlier version of this work is described in European patent publication EP 0,520,519 A1. As described therein, one advantage of inductively coupled plasmas over capacitively coupled plasmas is that the inductively coupled plasma is generated with a much smaller bias voltage on the wafer (reducing the likelihood of damage thereto) even in the presence of a greater plasma density. In the silicon oxide deposition disclosed in the referenced patent application, silane, mostly un-ionized, provides the silicon and a gaseous oxygen species provides the oxygen for the formation of silicon dioxide by CVD. Argon ions accelerated across the sheath adjacent the wafer are used for sputter etching.

FIG. 2 illustrates a CVD vacuum chamber 20 and RF antenna 22 for generating an inductively coupled plasma of the general type disclosed in the above-referenced application, although that particular chamber had a top-hat shape. The RF antenna 22 is a coiled conductor wound as a solenoid around the cylindrical vertical side wall 24 of the vacuum chamber 20. The source chamber wall adjacent the coil antenna is an insulator while the ceiling 26 and the process chamber walls are preferably grounded, the flat ceiling 26 functioning as a grounded electrode.

The cylindrical coil of the referenced application non-resonantly couples the RF energy in the coil antenna into the plasma source region via an induced azimuthal electric field. Even in free space, the electric field falls to zero at the center of the chamber. When a plasma is present, the electric field falls off even more quickly away from the chamber walls. The electric field accelerates electrons present in the plasma, which then further ionize atoms into ions or break up molecules into atoms or radicals. Because the coupling is not tuned to a plasma resonance, the coupling is much less dependent on frequency, pressure and local geometries. The plasma source region is designed to be spaced apart from the wafers, and the ions and atoms or radicals generated in the source region diffuse to the wafer.

The chamber of the above-referenced application is primarily designed for etching at relatively low chamber pressures, at which the electrons have mean free paths on the order of centimeters. Therefore, we believe the electrons, even though primarily generated near the chamber walls, diffuse toward the center and tend to homogenize the plasma across a significant diameter of the source region. As a result, the diffusion of ions and atoms or radicals to the wafer tend to be relatively uniform across the wafer.

We believe the reactor of the above-referenced application has a problem when it is used for CVD deposition and sputter etching, particularly involving oxygen. For CVD, the chamber pressure tends to be somewhat higher, reducing the electron mean free path and resulting in a nonuniform plasma density with the peak density occurring in an outer annulus of the plasma. Furthermore, oxygen ions or radicals are subject to many recombination paths so that their diffusion lengths are relatively limited. Thus, the wafer center is farther from the plasma source region than the wafer edges, and the oxygen ion and radical density is less near the center of the wafer 28 than it is at the edges thereof, as illustrated in the solid line curve of ion density of FIG. 3. The lack of oxygen ions near the wafer center reduces the sputter etch rate relative to the CVD deposition rate, leading to formation of the void 15 as illustrated in FIG. 1A in spaces or channels near the wafer center (e.g., the channel 12 of FIG. 1A), while spaces near the wafer periphery have the desired ratio between sputtering and deposition rates.

One possible solution would be to raise the height of the ceiling 26 and to increase the axial height of the antenna 22 above the wafer. (For argon only, the ion distribution for this taller source would be virtually uniform in accordance with the dashed-line curve of FIG. 3.) However, such a height increase is impractical because the larger volume makes cleaning of the system more difficult. Another possible solution would be to operate the source region at a very low pressure (below 1 milliTorr), at which the oxygen ion density is quite uniform and ion distribution may not be as severe a problem, depending upon the distance of the wafer to the top electrode. However, maintaining such a hard vacuum requires an impractically large pump size, and so a relatively lower vacuum (higher pressure) between 1 and 30 milliTorr is needed for commercial viability.

Some of these problems are addressed by Ogle in U.S. Pat. No. 4,948,458 by the use of a planar spiral coil antenna placed on a flat dielectric chamber top. This is sometimes called a pancake coil. Such a design is claimed to create a uniform plasma source region adjacent the top of the chamber, thus providing uniform ion and radical diffusion to the wafer.

However, we believe the pancake coil to have drawbacks. Its planar configuration suggests that a significant part of its RF power coupling into the chamber is capacitive coupling, that is, it uses electric fields set up by charge accumulation in the antenna structure rather than electric fields induced by current flow through the antenna, as is the case with inductive coupling. Capacitive coupling generally creates very high electric fields, which in turn create high-energy electrons that are deleterious in a semiconductor reactor. In contrast, the predominantly inductive coupling of the above-referenced application of Collins et al. produces lower electric fields and lower electron energies.

Accordingly, there is a need to uniformly distribute oxygen ions in high density inductively coupled plasmas between 1 and 30 milliTorr across large (8-inch) wafers in order to maintain uniform oxygen sputter or etch rates on the order of 1000 Angstroms per minute.

Another problem is that silane emitted from the gas outlets 30 in the sides of the vacuum chamber 20 diffuses equally in all directions, not just toward the wafer 28. Since the silane and oxygen gases react together spontaneously, and since the chamber walls are closer to the gas outlets 30 than most of the wafer 28 (particularly for larger diameter wafers), deposition of SiO₂ over all interior surfaces of the vacuum chamber 20 is greater than that on the wafer 28. This means that the reactor must be periodically removed from productive activity and the SiO₂ coating removed from the interior surfaces, a significant disadvantage.

Thus, there is a need for a reactor which deposits less CVD residue (e.g., SiO₂) on the interior chamber surfaces and which therefore requires less frequent cleaning.

SUMMARY

A non-conductive dome-shaped portion having a plurality of different radii as a dielectric inductive coupling wall of a reactor chamber. The non-conductive dome-shaped portion having a plurality of different radii being adapted to be positioned in close underlying relationship to a coil antenna and transmissive of RF energy inductively coupled into the chamber from the coil.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1A is a simplified diagram illustrating problems encountered in depositing material on small microelectronic features having relatively high aspect ratios.

FIG. 1B is a graph illustrating the affect of surface angle on sputter etch rate.

FIG. 1C is a simplified diagram corresponding to FIG. 1A showing a desired deposition pattern achieved using simultaneous CVD and sputter etch processes.

FIG. 2 is a simplified diagram of a CVD-RF plasma etch apparatus disclosed in a related application.

FIG. 3 is a graph illustrating the effect of distance from the wafer center on the ion density for argon and oxygen characteristic of the apparatus of FIG. 2.

FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional elevational view of a reactor employing a showerhead gas distribution apparatus.

FIG. 5 is a cross-sectional elevational view of a reactor employing a showerhead gas distribution apparatus.

FIG. 6 is a cross-sectional elevational view of a reactor employing a dome-shaped inductive coupling wall having a plurality of different radii.

FIG. 7 is a perspective view illustrating a Faraday shield capable of being employed with a dome-shaped inductive coupling wall having a plurality of different radii.

FIG. 8 is a cross-sectional elevational view of a reactor employing a dome-shaped inductive coupling wall having a plurality of different radii.

FIG. 9 is a cross-sectional side view of a possible gas nozzle shape employed in the embodiment of FIG. 7.

FIG. 10 is a cross-sectional elevational view of a reactor employing a cylindrical antenna, a flat ceiling and a multiple nozzle gas distribution apparatus.

FIG. 11 is a cross-sectional elevational view of a reactor employing a cylindrical antenna, a multiple nozzle gas distribution apparatus and a domed conductive ceiling.

FIG. 12 is a cross-sectional elevational view of a reactor employing a dome-shaped inductive coupling wall having a plurality of different radii.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

Referring to FIG. 4, a reactor of an improved inductively coupled plasma CVD reactor concentrates the silane gas more on the wafer 40 and less on the interior vacuum chamber walls 42, 43, 44 by releasing the silane gas directly over and close to (within about 2 inches or 5 cm of) the wafer surface 46 by a showerhead 48 extending parallel to and across substantially the entire wafer diameter and disposed in an opening in the ceiling 44 of the vacuum chamber. In the illustrated reactor, the wall 42 is a dielectric material while the wall 43 and ceiling 44 are electrically conductive materials. As in the apparatus of FIG. 2, the chamber walls 43, 44 are electrically grounded. A coiled RF antenna 49 extending from above the showerhead 48 to below the wafer 46 generates a plasma within the chamber by inductive coupling through the dielectric wall 42.

The showerhead 48 consists of a flat circular bottom wall 50 parallel to the wafer 40 and having many narrow vertical spray openings 51 therethrough. The showerhead 48 is integrally formed with a cylindrical wall 52 having a circular shoulder 54 resting on the top of the chamber ceiling 44. A circular intermediate wall 56 has narrow vertical spray openings 58 therethrough laterally interleaved with the spray openings 51 of the bottom wall 50. A spray chamber 60 is formed between the circular bottom and intermediate walls and the cylindrical side wall 52. A flat circular top wall 62 of the nozzle bounds a manifold 64 with the intermediate wall 56 and the side wall 52. A pair of external gas inlets 66, 68 connect to a mixing manifold 70 extending through the top wall 62 into the manifold 64. For silicon dioxide CVD, silane and oxygen are fed into the chamber through separate pipes. In order to confine the plasma away from the surface of the bottom nozzle wall 50, a set of discrete magnets 72 are distributed (in accordance with well-known plasma confining techniques) across the entire top surface of the bottom nozzle wall 50. Their magnetic field lines correspond to the field line 72 a illustrated in FIG. 4.

Insulation 73 may be placed on the upper surfaces of the chamber on the ceiling 44 and the outer surface of the nozzle cylindrical side wall 52.

The wafer 40 is supported by an RF electrode 74 (of the type disclosed in the above-referenced commonly-assigned application) to within about 2 inches (5 cm) of the bottom wall 50 of the nozzle. This feature assures preferential distribution of the incoming gas toward the wafer 40 assuring superior performance as a CVD reactor.

The RF sputtering performed by reactor of FIG. 4 suffers from a tendency of the plasma to concentrate in the peripheral annular region 76, leaving less plasma over the center of the wafer 40. This reduces the RF sputter etch rate at the wafer center. Thus, while the reactor of FIG. 4 performs CVD to great advantage, it is not as useful for performing simultaneous CVD—sputter etch processes with competing etch and deposition rates nor is it useful for sputter etch processes using oxygen chemistry. However, this reactor is useful for any inductively coupled or inductively enhanced CVD deposition process where some compromise in plasma (ion) density uniformity over the wafer surface is acceptable.

One technique for solving the problem of plasma concentration in the peripheral annulus 76 is to raise the ceiling 44, as illustrated in FIG. 5, to about 4 inches (10 cm) or more. While this does improve the uniformity of plasma distribution, it so increases the chamber volume and diffusion distance to the wafer as to remove the advantage of a small volume chamber. Thus, there would seem to be nothing further to be gained by this approach.

The seemingly intractable problem of non-uniform distribution of oxygen ions at higher (1-30 milliTorr) vacuums is solved in the reactor of FIG. 6. The solution is to configure the coiled RF antenna over the wafer in such a manner that all portions of the wafer are more evenly spaced from the total plasma source region adjacent the coil and chamber wall. As a result, the flux of ionic and atomic oxygen is more uniform across the wafer such that the etch rate over corner features 16 (FIG. 1A) is uniform across the wafer. As shown in FIG. 6, this is accomplished by configuring the coiled antenna 80 in a dome shape overlying and centered on the wafer 82, as well as configuring the ceiling 84 of the vacuum chamber itself in the same dome shape so that it can support the antenna 80. As before, the antenna 80 is a coiled conductor.

An advantage facilitated by the dome-shaped ceiling 84 and coiled antenna 80 of FIG. 6 is that the region adjacent the ceiling 84 of greatest ion concentration extends over a portion of the surface of the wafer 82, thus reducing the path length to the wafer center and thereby increasing the oxygen ion density at the wafer center. By contrast, in the apparatus of FIG. 2, the region of greatest ion concentration is generally vertical in extent and therefore does not overlie any portion of the wafer and is nearest only the wafer edge.

In order to promote inductive coupling, the dome-shaped coiled antenna 80 includes a straight vertical cylindrical portion 80 a corresponding to the simple vertical solenoid antenna coil 22 of FIG. 2 and providing the closed magnetic field lines like the magnetic field lines 25 of FIG. 2 associated with inductively coupled plasmas. The curved portion 80 b of the dome-shaped coiled antenna 80 brings the region of maximum ion density closer to the wafer center, in accordance with the feature thereof described above. Preferably, the curved portion 80 b has an axial length greater than 20% of the diameter of the cylindrical portion 80 a. For example, in a preferred reactor, the overall vertical extent of the coiled antenna 80 is about 9 cm, which is greater than 20% of the coil diameter or diameter of the cylindrical portion 80 a.

The horizontal projection of the antenna 80 is a spiral having a center void. The center void preferably has a diameter d of from 2 to 8 inches (50 to 200 mm) for an 8-inch wafer in a chamber having a total diameter of slightly less than about 14 inches (35 cm). That is, the void preferably is 25% to 100% of the wafer diameter. This void allows a magnetic field to funnel therethrough and is preferred to suppress capacitive coupling and promote the inductive coupling of the RF energy into the plasma, thereby maintaining the low electron energies and high plasma ion density characteristic of inductively coupled plasmas.

The number of windings in each of the two portions 80 a, 80 b of the coiled antenna 80 is determined by the spacing between coil winds, the shape of the dome ceiling 84 (including the height H_(v) of the vertical portion thereof) and the void diameter d. The preferred coil spacing is between ¼ inch and ⅜ inch (0.63 cm and 0.94 cm). Alternatively, the coil spacing may be on the order of a conductor width or less. The void diameter d has been defined in the previous paragraph as being between 25% and 100% of the wafer diameter. The smooth convex shape of the dome ceiling 84 currently employed is dictated by the use of the dome-shaped floor of a type 510 General Electric fused quartz crucible, General Electric part number 14111F, as the quartz ceiling layer 84 a, having a major dome radius R₁ of 15 inch (37.5 cm) and a corner radius R₂ of 35 inch (8.75 cm) and an outside diameter of 14 inch (35 cm). Most of the long vertical cylindrical portion of the GE crucible is removed, leaving a shortened vertical height H_(v) of about ¼ inch (0.63 cm). The distance between the wafer surface and the bottom (outer edge) of the dome ceiling 84 is about 1.5 inch (3.75 cm) while the distance between the wafer surface and the top (apex) of the dome ceiling is about 4.9 inch (12.25 cm). Preferably, the wafer height is below the lowest coil of the antenna 80.

The skilled worker can adjust the dome or spherical shape of the coiled antenna 80 as desired for optimum uniformity of RF energy across the wafer surface given the wafer size and dome height, so that the invention may be implemented with different dome shapes. In general, the dome shape is a shell of revolution whose shape maximizes the ability of the dome to withstand mechanical stress caused by the external atmospheric pressure. This shape provides maximum mechanical strength between the vacuum and atmosphere. The shape described above is a special case of a shape having a plurality of sections of differing radii that are smoothly joined, that is, have equal first derivatives at the joints between them and at the joint with the cylindrical portion. Indeed, the curvature may continuously increase from the dome top to the cylinder. Other smoothly varying shapes can be used, but a conical shape is disadvantageous because of its poor mechanical strength and the distorted electromagnetic fields produced at the sharp joint with the cylindrical portion.

The dome height is preferably greater than half and not much more than 2 times the wafer diameter and preferably is approximately equal to the wafer diameter. The skilled worker can readily determine an optimum spacing (other than that disclosed above) between adjacent conductors of the coiled antenna 80 as a function of height or position on the dome for uniformity of RF energy across the wafer surface. As disclosed in the above-referenced patent application, the conductor length of the antenna 80 is one-quarter of the wavelength of the RF signal employed to generate the plasma.

In this reactor, the length of the antenna conductor is about 7 to 11 feet (2.1 m to 3.4 m). RF generating and tuning circuitry of the type disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 07/975,355 filed Nov. 12, 1992 by Collins et al. and assigned to the present assignee are connected to the antenna 80 and may be employed to adjust the impedance of the antenna in accordance with a desired RF frequency.

The details of construction of the reactor of FIG. 6 correspond largely to the disclosure of the above-referenced patent application. In the preferred embodiment, the interior layer 84 a is the GE quartz crucible described above which can withstand the high plasma temperatures inside the chamber. The exterior cooling layer 84 b (containing the coiled antenna 80) consists of a dielectric thermally conductive material such as alumina. Of course, other materials, especially dielectrics, may be substituted.

In order to suppress capacitive coupling, a grounded Faraday shield 85 having the “easter egg” configuration illustrated in FIG. 7 may be placed between the dome layers 84 a, 84 b between the antenna 80 and the plasma, in accordance with well-known techniques, the Faraday shield thus conforming to the dome shape of the ceiling 84 and antenna 80, including a void of diameter d. The width W of each conductive film arching strip in the shield 85 is about 1 cm and the spacing S therebetween is about 0.1 cm. As shown in the drawing, the strips are joined by a ring at the bottom but float at their tops. An RF bias electrode 74 supporting the wafer 82 is connected to an RF source 90 while one end of the conical helical antenna 80 is connected to an RF source 92. The chamber side 102 is connected to ground. Although in a tested reactor the RF sources 90 and 92 had frequencies of 1.8 MHz and 2.0 MHz, it is expected that an industry standard frequency of 13.56 MHz will be employed. Other frequencies in the kHz to MHz range can also be used. However, frequencies above 20 MHz have been observed to introduce defects, and below 400 kHz the plasma becomes difficult to strike. The RF power applied to the antenna 80 from the RF source 92 is preferably in the range of 1000 to 3000 watts, while the RF power applied to the bias electrode from the RF source 90 is in the range of 500 to 2000 watts. Cooling is provided through coolant jackets 94.

The problem of concentrating the gas (silane) more on the wafer 80 and less on the chamber walls is solved in the reactor of FIG. 6 by a gas ring manifold 96 fed with the gas (e.g., silane) from an inlet tube 98 connected to a gas manifold 100 in the vacuum chamber side wall 102. The ring surrounds the periphery of the wafer 80 but does not overlie the wafer 80. The advantage of the ring manifold 96 is that there are numerous spray holes 104 therein opening toward the interior of the chamber which release the silane gas very near the wafer 80 without impeding the plasma over the wafer 80.

However, the ring manifold 96 has some deleterious effect on the plasma, at least near the wafer periphery, and is subject to heating. Heating of the ring manifold 96 makes it liable to failure due to formation of amorphous silicon residues in its interior from breakdown of the silane gas flowing within it. The manifold 96 can reach temperatures as high as 500° C. at high RF power levels.

The heating problem is solved in the reactor of FIG. 8, which employs at least four (and as many as 8 or 12 or more) periodically circumferentially spaced radially inwardly-directed gas feed nozzles 106 each connected through the cylindrical chamber side wall 102 to the gas manifold 100 therein. The advantage is that the chamber wall 102 is a heat sink to the nozzles 106, its outer surface facing a cool environment, holding the temperature of the nozzles 106 well-below that at which silane tends to break down to form amorphous silicon. Another advantage of the reactor of FIG. 8 is that the nozzles present a far smaller cross-section to the plasma than does the ring manifold 96 of FIG. 6, and therefore little loss of the plasma density occurs. The nozzles 106 introduce the silane while any gas distribution device of the type disclosed in the above-referenced patent application suffices to introduce oxygen, argon or other gases into the vacuum chamber.

In order to minimize any impedance between the plasma and the wafer, the nozzles 106 of FIG. 8, like the ring manifold 96 of FIG. 6, extend close to but not over the wafer 80.

Further preference in the distribution of the silane gas towards the wafer 80 is achieved by maintaining supersonic gas flow through the exit ports of the nozzles 106. This is accomplished by using a very small nozzle orifice (preferably on the order of 10 mils) and maintaining a large pressure differential between the inside and outside of the nozzle 106 for a given gas flow and a given number of nozzles. As illustrated, the nozzle tip has an inner portion sharply tapering radially inwardly and an outer portion gradually tapering radially outwardly. A sapphire sleeve within the orifice prevents clogging.

Such a pressure differential is realized by the vacuum maintained within the chamber relative to the nozzle orifice. Typically, the total flow rate through all the nozzles is in the range of 30 to 120 standard cubic centimeters per second. Such supersonic gas flow is characterized (as shown in FIG. 9) by a Mach disk 110 inboard of the wafer periphery, preferably by a few centimeters. The Mach disk 110 is an imaginary boundary behind which no silane diffuses back directly toward the nozzle 106. The result is that the effective center of diffusion 112 of the silane gas is several centimeters (about 3 cm in one implementation) inboard of the wafer periphery rather than being at the tip of the nozzle, a significant advantage. Provided the vacuum pressure inside the chamber is less than about 30 milliTorr, the silane distribution from the diffusion centers 112 is uniform across the wafer surface.

Supersonic gas flow can also be achieved in the ring manifold 96 of FIG. 6 by the same step of maintaining a sufficient pressure differential between the interior of the gas manifold 96 and the interior of the vacuum chamber. With such supersonic gas flow, the ring manifold 96 may be enlarged so as to not be near the heat-inducing plasma.

A cross-sectional side view of a preferred nozzle 106 is illustrated in FIG. 9. The shape of the nozzle tip is important to minimize the deposition on the nozzle itself. In order to achieve a 3% uniformity of deposition and sputter etch rates across an 8-inch wafer surface, more than eight periodically spaced nozzles 106 are preferably employed in the reactor of FIG. 8.

The plasma reactors of FIGS. 6 and 8 are useful in performing any CVD thin film deposition. The nozzle gas distribution described above is especially useful for any deposition of films using highly reactive chemical precursor species such as silane. The reactor can be used for films other than silicon dioxide, such as, for example, diamond. Moreover deposition of material having a high dielectric constant can be carried out as well by these reactors.

FIG. 10 illustrates how the silane nozzles may be combined with the cylindrical antenna design discussed previously in connection with FIG. 4. As in the reactors of FIGS. 2, 4 and 5, the chamber walls in the reactor of FIG. 10, including the metal ceiling 44, are electrically grounded. The nozzles of the invention can be advantageously used in any plasma reactor, including RF and DC capacitively coupled reactors.

The reactor of FIG. 10 may be improved by replacing the flat conductive ceiling 44 of FIG. 10 with a dome-shaped conductive ceiling 116 illustrated in FIG. 11. The shape of the dome-shaped conductive ceiling 116 of FIG. 11 generally corresponds to the dome-shaped dielectric ceiling of the preferred reactors of FIGS. 6 and 8 and provides similar benefits in more uniformly distributing the ion concentration over the wafer center. Specifically, the dome-shaped conductive ceiling 116 provides an electrical ground reference plane to the plasma which enhances sputter etch rate. The ground plane provided by the dome-shaped ceiling 116 is further away from the wafer surface at the wafer center than at the wafer edges so as to enhance ion density near the wafer center by providing more volume for ion diffusion to even out non-uniformites, thereby increasing ion density uniformity across the wafer surface. Preferably, the dome-shaped conductive ceiling 116 of FIG. 11 has a major radius R₁ of 10.42 inch (26.05 cm) and a horizontal diameter D of 12.25 inch (30.6 cm). The dome-shaped ceiling 116 is supported by shoulders 116 a resting on the vertical vacuum chamber wall 114 so that the top of the dome ceiling 116 rises about 5 inches (12.5 cm) above the wafer, similarly to the reactor of FIG. 6. As in the reactor of FIG. 10, the dome-shaped conductive ceiling 116 is electrically grounded. One advantage of the reactor of FIG. 11 is that a sputter etch process having a uniformity across the wafer surface similar to that achieved in the reactors of FIGS. 6 and 8 can be obtained using the cylindrical RF antenna coil configuration employed in the reactors of FIGS. 4 and 5.

An additional advantage of the reactor of FIG. 11 is that the conductive ceiling 116 can be connected to an RF power source 118 and disconnected from ground by a switch 120 to facilitate cleaning of the vacuum chamber using a conventional fluorine etch cleaning process. Powering the conductive ceiling 116 with a bias RF field during an in-situ chamber clean enhances the cleaning rate and efficiency of the cleaning process in removing contamination from the chamber walls and ceiling 116.

Features of the reactors of FIGS. 6 and 11 can be advantageously combined as illustrated in FIG. 12. A top central dome-shaped electrode 122 is placed within the central void of the spiral antenna 80. It is electrically isolated from the spiral antenna 80 and is held between the dielectric layers 84 a, 84 b of the ceiling 84. The top electrode 122 can be advantageously used for chamber cleaning when it is connected to an RF source. For operation as a cleaning electrode, it should have a diameter less than that of the pedestal. During normal CVD operations, the top electrode 122 can be left floating, be grounded or be otherwise electrically controlled.

While reactors have been described with reference to sputter etching employing electronegative ions such as oxygen ions, other species may be employed such as fluorine. If chlorine is employed for sputter etching, then materials other than aluminum for the chamber walls may be substituted to avoid damage thereto from chlorine ions.

Although the invention is particularly useful for a CVD process using an inductively coupled RF plasma and oxygen sputtering, it is not so limited. The dome-shaped coil can be applied to etching processes and to processes using other processing gases such as the halogen-containing fluorocarbons, for example. The inventive nozzles can be applied to almost any type of plasma processing chamber, whether for CVD, etching or physical vapor deposition.

While the invention has been described in detail by specific reference to preferred embodiments, it is understood that variations and modifications thereof may be made without departing from the true spirit and scope of the invention. 

What is claimed is:
 1. An RF plasma reactor having a chamber for processing a workpiece therewithin, and a coil of conductive material overlying the chamber and which is adapted to accept RF power and inductively couple RF energy via a non-conductive wall of the chamber into the interior of the chamber to support a plasma from process gas within the chamber, the reactor comprising: a non-conductive dome-shaped portion having a plurality of different radii as a dielectric inductive coupling wall of the chamber, said non-conductive dome-shaped portion being adapted to be positioned in close underlying relationship to the coil and transmissive of RF energy inductively coupled into the chamber from the coil.
 2. The plasma reactor of claim 1, wherein said dome-shaped portion defines a concave interior surface.
 3. The plasma reactor of claim 2, wherein said concave interior surface is shaped so as to be further away from a center of an underlying workpiece than from an edge of the underlying workpiece.
 4. The plasma reactor of claim 1, wherein said dome-shaped portion comprises a plurality of smoothly joined portions having differing radii of curvature.
 5. The plasma reactor of claim 1, wherein said dome-shaped portion has a curvature increasing from a central position of said dome-shaped portion to a peripheral position of said dome-shaped portion.
 6. The plasma reactor of claim 5, wherein said curvature increases continuously from a central position of said dome-shaped portion to a peripheral position of said dome-shaped portion.
 7. The plasma reactor of claim 1, wherein said dome-shaped portion is an interior concave surface of said dielectric inductive coupling wall.
 8. The plasma reactor of claim 1, wherein said dome-shaped may be disposed opposite the workpiece a distance from between about ½ to about 2 times a diameter of the workpiece.
 9. The plasma reactor of claim 8, wherein a central apex of said dome-shaped portion may be disposed opposite the workpiece a distance from between about ½ to about 1 times the diameter of the workpiece.
 10. The plasma reactor of claim 9, wherein said dome-shaped portion may be disposed opposite the workpiece about 5 inches from the workpiece.
 11. The plasma reactor of claim 1, wherein said dome-shaped portion comprises quartz.
 12. An inductively coupled RF plasma reactor adapted to process a workpiece therein, including a vacuum chamber having walls and at least one gas source for introducing reactant gases into the chamber and comprising an antenna capable of radiating RF energy into said chamber by inductive coupling, the reactor comprising: a dome-shaped dielectric chamber ceiling having a plurality of different radii adapted to support an RF inductive coil antenna centered above a workpiece and capable of coupling RF inductive power radiated by the RF inductive coil antenna through said dome-shaped dielectric chamber ceiling.
 13. The plasma reactor of claim 12, wherein said dome-shaped dielectric chamber ceiling defines a concave interior surface.
 14. The plasma reactor of claim 13, wherein said concave interior surface is shaped so as to be further away from a center of an underlying workpiece than from an edge of the underlying workpiece.
 15. The plasma reactor of claim 12, wherein said dome-shaped dielectric chamber ceiling comprises a plurality of smoothly joined portions having differing radii of curvature.
 16. The plasma reactor of claim 12, wherein said dome-shaped dielectric chamber ceiling has a curvature increasing from a central position of said dome-shaped chamber ceiling to a peripheral position of said dome-shaped chamber ceiling.
 17. The plasma reactor of claim 16, wherein said curvature increases continuously from a central position of said dome-shaped chamber ceiling to a peripheral position of said dome-shaped chamber ceiling.
 18. The plasma reactor of claim 12, wherein said dome-shaped dielectric chamber ceiling is an interior concave surface of the chamber walls.
 19. The plasma reactor of claim 12, wherein said dome-shaped chamber ceiling may be disposed opposite the workpiece a distance from between about ½ to about 2 times a diameter of the workpiece.
 20. The plasma reactor of claim 19, wherein said domes shaped chamber ceiling may be disposed opposite the workpiece a distance from between about ½ to about 1 times the diameter of the workpiece.
 21. The plasma reactor of claim 20, wherein said dome-shaped chamber ceiling may be disposed opposite the workpiece about 5 inches from the workpiece.
 22. The plasma reactor of claim 12, wherein said dome-shaped dielectric chamber ceiling comprises quartz.
 23. An inductively coupled plasma reactor adapted to process a workpiece therein and having a coil antenna overlying a dielectric inductive coupling wall and a workpiece pedestal, the reactor comprising: an antenna support transmissive of inductive RF power, said support comprising a dielectric dome-shaped portion having a plurality of different radii for RF power coupling therethrough.
 24. The plasma reactor of claim 23, wherein the dome-shaped portion defines a concave interior surface.
 25. The plasma reactor of claim 24, wherein said concave interior surface is shaped so as to be further away from a center of an underlying workpiece than from an edge of the underlying workpiece.
 26. The plasma reactor of claim 23, wherein the said dome-shaped portion comprises a plurality of smoothly joined portions having differing radii of curvature.
 27. The plasma reactor of claim 23, wherein said support has a curvature increasing from a central position of said support to a peripheral position of said support.
 28. The plasma reactor of claim 27, wherein said curvature increases continuously from a central position of said support to a peripheral position of said support.
 29. The plasma reactor of claim 23, wherein said dome-shaped portion is an interior concave surface of said antenna support.
 30. The plasma reactor of claim 23, wherein said antenna support is adapted to support the coil antenna centered above the workpiece pedestal.
 31. The plasma reactor of claim 23, wherein said antenna support may be disposed opposite the workpiece a distance from between about ½ to about 2 times a diameter of the workpiece.
 32. The plasma reactor of claim 31, wherein a central apex of said antenna support may be disposed opposite the workpiece a distance from between about ½ to about 1 times the diameter of the workpiece.
 33. The plasma reactor of claim 32, wherein said central apex of said antenna support may be disposed opposite the workpiece about 5 inches from the workpiece.
 34. The plasma reactor of claim 23, wherein said dome-shaped portion comprises quartz. 